NCJ Number
230450
Date Published
May 2010
Length
46 pages
Annotation
This paper proposes a theory of interaction between the social, economic and ecological settings that could produce long-term crime problems in neighborhoods that are suffering from concentrated foreclosures.
Abstract
This paper proposes a theory of interaction between the social, economic and ecological settings that could produce long-term crime problems in neighborhoods that are suffering from concentrated foreclosures. It goes further and explores the possibility for accelerated neighborhood decline that may be difficult to suppress, and which may significantly shock the local economy. To do so, the authors draw on a wealth of research findings from sociology, economics, housing studies, and geography, to expand on a criminological base to make the case for their concern that concentrated foreclosures may ultimately create deviant places and severely impact the progress of the metropolitan areas within which they are set.
Date Published: May 1, 2010
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Supporting Implementation of Universal Prevention Initiatives in K-12 Schools: Impacts on Fidelity through Organizational Readiness and Team Functioning in a Cluster-Randomized Trial
- The relative and joint effects of gunshot detection technology and video surveillance cameras on case clearance in Chicago
- Firearms: use and storage at home and use in suicides by children